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Michael- some answers for you
1- The trademark EBRO comes from the Ebro River, the second largest river in Spain.
2-EBRO was a trademark of Adolph Kastor & sons of New York who purchased the trademark in Sheffield from Joseph Wostenholm & Sons, who also used the EBRO with the 2 Maltese crosses prior to selling it to A. Kastor. Alfred Williams speciality was selling knives to the US market, so his knives bore his name as well as the EBRO importer stamp.
3-In addition to Alfred Williams and Joseph Wostenholm, I found someone who owned a knife marked EBRO-Thomas Wilson-Shear Steel-Sheffield. Most recently, Puma sells an EBRO knife, minus the Maltese crosses.
4-Yes, Alfred Williams did make knives without the EBRO trademark-Notably, he made sailors rope knives for the US Navy.There were probably others, if they were not imported by Kastor.
Thanks John. Informative as usual. Do you have any idea which they made more of, the 5" bowie like mine or the 6" bowie?
Michael- As to which they made more of, I have no idea and no clue as to where to begin looking for the information, short of finding a set of Adolph Kastor invoices or import records. BTW, your Bowie not only came in a 5" and 6" version, but a 7" as well.
Nicely done John, I love reading your posts. I'm constantly learning something!
Bryan W-Thank you so much for your kind words--I use your PDF on The Tang Stamps Of Adolph Kastor, Camillus and Their Cutlery Relatives all the time and of course, your great work on the magazine. Glad I can occasionally add to your already vast wealth of knowledge !!
Thanks John. So now I have to find a 6" and a 7" , oh boy.
I found this EBRO knife during an auction. I was wondering if you all could shine any light on it for me. It looks pretty well made and the aging looks right. A note with it said WWII maybe.
Ah, a thistle-top knife. The blade has been heavily ground down, but there was a very good article in Knife World a couple years ago on this style knife, which was manufactured by several different companies. The handle appears to be in great shape. Nice pattern and a nice find! The vintage is likely correct, possibly earlier - its got the age, wear and markings. Look back on the Knife World/KNIFE Magazine website and you should be able to track down that issue - it will tell you everything about this style knife. Enjoy!
Bryan W ! Thank you for the info!
Thanks for the info Bryan W, very helpful.
Bryan W said:
Ah, a thistle-top knife. The blade has been heavily ground down, but there was a very good article in Knife World a couple years ago on this style knife, which was manufactured by several different companies. The handle appears to be in great shape. Nice pattern and a nice find! The vintage is likely correct, possibly earlier - its got the age, wear and markings. Look back on the Knife World/KNIFE Magazine website and you should be able to track down that issue - it will tell you everything about this style knife. Enjoy
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